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Everything posted by Revo

  1. Revo

    congrats brother ❤️ 

    1. Reus

      Reus

      thanks bruh ❤️

  2. congrats brother ❤️ 

    D3awi weld char9i m3ak hh

  3. Revo

    congrats for the admin well deserved ❤️ 🥳

    1. Qween

      Qween

      Thank you ❤️

  4. Video title : PHOTO Turned FISH SLAP! 😂 | Fails of the Week | AFV 2021 Content creator ( Youtuber ) :America's Funniest Home Videos Official YT video :
  5. Trust Nora Fatehi to ace the most elaborate outfits with utter ease and oodles of glamour. And she proved it yet again when she recently shared a series of stunning images wearing a creation by designer duo Abu Jani Sandeep Khosla. In the pictures, Nora looks ethereal in a halter blouse adorned with pearls and crystal. This look is certainly not for the faint-hearted but she carries it off effortlessly. The blouse was paired with a sheer white sari. Describing the look, the designers said: “Nora Fatehi wears light as air, organza Dhakai Jamdani saree, hand-embroidered with Resham mandala motifs and edged with a Resham and sequins lace border. A pearl and crystals blouse adds lustrous glamour to this ethereal masterpiece.” The sari was not draped in the traditional way, with gave an interesting twist to the look. For makeup, she went for glossy red lips, sleek eyeliner and a rose gold pink eyeshadow. It was all brought together with lightly contoured cheeks and a generous dose of highlighter.
  6. Rabat – The Ministry of Health said the number of people in Morocco who have received COVID-19 vaccines reached 408,235 as of February 5. The first phase of the vaccination campaign started on January 28. The campaign prioritizes teachers, doctors, and security officers, as well people at particular risk of infection. Morocco purchased 66 million doses of the vaccines, seeking to target 33 million within Morocco’s po[CENSORED]tion. To date, Morocco has confirmed 474,379 infections, with 712 new COVID-19 cases in the last 24 hours. The ministry also confirmed 780 new recoveries. The number of people who have recovered from the virus reached 453,302. The death toll related to COVID-19 cases reached 8,368 after 17 additional carriers died in the past 24 hours. The number of active cases reached 12,709, including 606 in critical condition. The region of Casablanca-Settat recorded 306 new cases and six deaths, while Tanger-Tetouan-Al Hoceima confirmed 93 new infections and two new fatalities. The Oriental region recorded 81 new infections and two COVID-19-related deaths, while the Souss-Massa region confirmed 60 cases and no additional deaths. The Rabat-Sale-Kenitra region followed with 52 cases and three deaths, followed by Marrakech-Safi (46 cases, two deaths), Dakhla-Oued Eddahab (19 cases, one death), Laayoune-Sakia El Hamra (13 cases, no deaths), Guelmim-Oued Noun (13 cases, no deaths), and Beni Mellal-Khenifra (11 cases, zero additional deaths). Draa-Tafilalet confirmed nine cases and one death, followed by Fez-Meknes (nine new cases and no new fatalities).
  7. Name of the game: Sekiro™: Shadows Die Twice - GOTY Edition Price: 38.99$ After Discount Link Store: Here Offer ends up after X hours: 17 February Requirements: MINIMUM: Système d'exploitation : Windows 7 64-bit | Windows 8 64-bit | Windows 10 64-bit Processeur : Intel Core i3-2100 | AMD FX-6300 Mémoire vive : 4 GB de mémoire Graphiques : NVIDIA GeForce GTX 760 | AMD Radeon HD 7950 DirectX : Version 11 Réseau : Connexion internet haut débit Espace disque : 25 GB d'espace disque disponible Carte son : DirectX 11 Compatible RECOMMENDED Système d'exploitation : Windows 7 64-bit | Windows 8 64-bit | Windows 10 64-bit Processeur : Intel Core i5-2500K | AMD Ryzen 5 1400 Mémoire vive : 8 GB de mémoire Graphiques : NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970 | AMD Radeon RX 570 DirectX : Version 11 Réseau : Connexion internet haut débit Espace disque : 25 GB d'espace disque disponible Carte son : DirectX 11 Compatible
  8. The price of a good gaming monitor is generally dictated by screen size, resolution and refresh rate. Other gaming features, like Adaptive-Sync, are pretty much a given for any display marketed to enthusiasts. And color accuracy and build quality do not necessarily go hand-in-hand with cost. BenQ may not be as well known for its gaming screens as brands like Asus or Acer, but it offers products that deliver performance, quality and value. Lately, it has brought out new models with interesting names like Zowie and Mobiuz. But these creative monikers don’t attempt to make up for any shortfall. The new Mobiuz EX2510 is a great example. It’s a 25-inch, 1080p resolution IPS panel with a 144 Hz refresh rate, FreeSync and G-Sync compatibility and HDR with BenQ’s HDRi emulation mode. At publication time, it’s selling for around $250, making it much more affordable than many of the market’s best gaming monitors. The 25-inch gaming monitor category is filled with super-fast 1080p resolution models running above 240 Hz and priced at the premium level. The 360 Hz Asus ROG Swift PG259QN is a perfect example. It’s a 25-inch, 1080p IPS monitor that costs an eye-watering $700. But if you’re OK with 144 Hz, you can save quite a bit of money. In fact, the BenQ EX2510 is a great alternative to 27-inch 1080p and 1440p monitors that typically cost about $75-100 more. The EX2510’s 144 Hz refresh rate is achieved without overclock. The monitor’s AMD FreeSync-certified, and we were also able to run Nvidia G-Sync on it, even though it’s not certified (to do this yourself, check out our How to Run G-Sync on a FreeSync Monitor tutorial). Though it’s compatible with HDR10 signals, the EX2510 does not include an extended color gamut. Color depth is a true 8 bits achieved without Frame Rate Compensation, and the backlight is flicker-free. Assembly and Accessories of BenQ Mobiuz EX2510 The EX2510’s build quality is apparent when you unpack its three parts. The base is nicely finished in silver with an orange rubber accent across the front. The upright is quite heavy and solid. Just attach it to the base with a captive bolt. The panel then snaps in place. A 100mm VESA mount is included for aftermarket hardware. In the box, you’ll find an HDMI cable and IEC power cord for the internal power supply. There’s also a snap-on cover for the input panel. You can pass the cables through a hole in the upright for a tidier look. The BenQ EX2510’s styling is somewhat blocky and understated for a gaming monitor., but it’s all about function. Straight lines dominate its shape with the only curve being a smooth taper across the back. The bezel is flush and free of physical framing, but you can see a thin 7mm border when the power’s on. The bottom trim is 21mm wide and features the BenQ logo and an HDRi button (more on that later). The front anti-glare layer is free of grain and presents a sharp image without reflecting any room light. The stand features 5 inches of height adjustment plus 20-degree swivel each way and -5/20 degrees of tilt. There is no portrait mode. Movements are very firm and solid with no play at all. Even if you shake up your desk during intense frag sessions the EX2510 will stay put. In addition to the HDRi button on the front, there are two more keys in the back-right corner, plus a joystick for menu navigation. One key toggles power, its status indicated by a white LED, and the other changes the signal source. The controls click firmly and respond quickly to user input. In the bezel’s center, you can see a small protrusion that houses the sensor for BenQ’s Brightness Intelligence Plus (BI+) feature. It works with two of the HDRi modes to adjust brightness and color temperature to the environment. It responds quickly to changes and, in most cases, you won’t see it working. The input panel includes two HDMI 2.0 ports and a DisplayPort version 1.2 (for help picking one, check out our HDMI vs DisplayPort article). You also get a 3.5mm audio jack for headphones or powered speakers. OSD Features of BenQ Mobiuz EX2510 The on-screen display (OSD) appears when you press the joystick button and scroll down to the menu option. You can configure the quick menu to the user to allow easy access to commonly used options like brightness or picture mode. The EX2510 includes three HDR and seven SDR presets. Standard is the default and most accurate choice with good out-of-box color and access to all picture options, like gamma and color temp. Other features include Light Tuner, which changes highlight and shadow detail levels. You can also access a low blue light mode from the Eye Care menu, along with the aforementioned BI+ feature, which engages the light sensor to change brightness and color temp automatically for different ambient lighting conditions. There are five gamma options and three preset color temps, plus a very precise user mode, which we used to calibrate the EX2510 to a high standard. Also here is AMA, BenQ’s term for overdrive. It worked well on the highest of three settings to curb motion blur without ghosting artifacts. If you want to try the backlight strobe for blur reduction, you’ll have to turn off FreeSync. For HDR content, the EX2510 will automatically switch to its default HDR mode, which is the best of the three. Cinema and Game turn the color temp quite blue, though the effect varies if you use the BI+ sensor. For testing purposes, we left these automatic enhancements off. To engage the bezel’s light sensor, turn it on in the Eye Care menu. It can vary brightness and color temp in the HDRi modes, as well as adjust itself over time to prevent eye fatigue. BenQ also includes red and green filters with 20 steps each to compensate for varying levels of user color blindness. BenQ Mobiuz EX2510 Calibration Settings In its Standard picture mode, the EX2510 is very accurate in the sRGB color space with no need for calibration. But a few gains are possible with adjustment of the RGB sliders in the user color temp mode. Gamma is spot-on with no adjustment necessary. Other picture modes are less accurate but may appeal to users playing specific game types. Using the HDRi emulations makes SDR content punchier but at the expense of some clarity in shadow and highlight areas. On page four, we’ll show you its effect with a few measurement charts. Below are our recommended calibration settings for the BenQ Mobiuz EX2510 and SDR content. They produce perfect gamma with very accurate grayscale and color tracking. Gaming and Hands-on with BenQ Mobiuz EX2510 One of the EX2510’s most unique features is its HDRi HDR emulation mode. It’s accessed by a button on the front panel and can give an HDR look to SDR content. HDRi works by mani[CENSORED]ting gamma to increase perceived contrast. While not strictly accurate, it may appeal to some. BenQ simplified the EX2510’s image options by eliminating any sort of dynamic contrast feature and leaving the HDRi modes the task of altering contrast for SDR content. We tested the three HDRi modes -- HDR, Game HDRi and Cinema HDRi -- with Windows apps and various games. It’s also possible to use the Cinema and Game modes with HDR-encoded content. In SDR mode, we booted up Tomb Raider, and all three HDRi modes degraded the image to varying degrees. HDR was the least offensive but darkened the picture too much overall. Brighter scenes looked about the same, but dimly lit indoor areas were too hard to make out. Game and Cinema HDRi made the effect worse and created a blue tint over everything. With these observations in mind, we recommend avoiding the HDRi HDR emulations unless the content is predominantly bright, like a sports game or animated movie. Turning on HDR in the Windows Control Panel had a positive effect. Very few HDR monitors actually look good running things like word processors and spreadsheets, but the EX2510 is an exception. By default, the monitor is set to 100% brightness with HDR content. That isn’t as harsh as you might think, given that it’s peaking at around 450 nits. Small highlights in photos and YouTube videos popped nicely, but the overall picture was very pleasing to look at. Our only complaint is elevated black levels. Though perceived contrast is very good, dark material looked a bit too gray and washed out. A Harry Potter film, for example, looked murky. You’re better off watching your HDR movies in SDR mode. Since there’s no extended color gamut, you won’t see any difference in saturation between SDR and HDR. But in terms of color overall, the monitor has very accurate color tracking, so we didn’t miss the DCI-P3 color space too much. With Windows HDR on, we played a few rounds of Call of Duty: WWII. This title makes great use of HDR, which is why we use it for testing. Bright cutscenes looked incredibly lifelike with sharp highlights and loads of detail on the EX2510. Darker areas were a bit gray, but detail was still easy to see. In all cases, we had no trouble with video processing. You can set overdrive to its highest value without ghosting, and blur was a non-issue. Adaptive-Sync worked perfectly on both AMD and Nvidia platforms (even though it’s not G-Sync-certified) with or without HDR. Frame rates stayed maxed at 144 frames per second (fps) in all the games we played. Input lag was also a non-issue with snappy control response and no stuttering or flicker. At this price, it’s hard to imagine finding superior gaming performance. BenQ put extra effort into its audio by tuning the built-in speakers with a technology called TreVolo. It’s a digital signal processor (DSP) devoted to tweaking the frequency response and phase of the speakers. There are three sound modes, and though they don’t deliver thumping bass at ear-bleeding levels, they sounded better than the average monitor speakers. Another bonus feature is in the ability to engage a sensor to alter brightness and color temperature to better suit the room’s lighting. This is also something that will deviate from accepted imaging parameters but won’t degrade the picture.
  9. In a major revelation, security researchers have discovered that a yet-unpatched vulnerability in Microsoft’s venerable Internet Explorer (IE) web browser was responsible for the spate of attacks against security researchers reported last month. Google’s Threat Analysis Group (TAG) last month disclosed that a North Korean state-sponsored hacking group employed various means, including creating elaborate fake personas to engage with the researchers, in their bid to break into their workstations. Now, according to reports, South Korean security firm ENKI has identified a previously undisclosed zero-day vulnerability in IE, which they claim has been exploited in these recent attacks. We've put together a list of the best endpoint protection software These are the best identity theft protection tools on the market Also, check out our roundup of the best VPN solutions Caught in the act As part of the attack, the threat actors, masquerading as researchers, sent malicious Visual Studio Projects and links to websites that hosted exploit kits to install backdoors on the researcher's computers. In a Korean language blog published yesterday, ENKI said that their researchers were also targeted by the group on the pretext of discussing a macOS exploit. While the attack failed, it gave the researchers a chance to analyze the files shared by the attackers in their bid to gain access to their computers. Their analysis led ENKI to believe that the attackers are piggybacking on an exploit for an IE zero-day vulnerability to deliver the malicious payload. ENKi then created a proof-of-concept for the exploit which has also reportedly been reproduced by other security researchers based on the details shared by ENKI. According to the report, ENKI is in touch with Microsoft who’ve requested further details from the Korean company.
  10. Good activity , hard working & respectful person , you deserve a chance to be with us.
  11. The 2021 Porsche Taycan is huge fun in its four-wheel drive, Turbo or 4S forms. But what if less is more? This car is just badged Porsche Taycan, a simple name signifying that it only has one electric motor, so is purely rear-wheel drive. That in turn means it's lighter than other Taycans, weighing from 2050kg, which means it could be better? We'll see. The latest Porsche Taycan has two power options, depending on which battery size you spec. Which is where it all gets a bit complicated. As standard, costing £70,690, it has 322bhp in normal driving or 402bhp on overboost when using launch control. Specify a Performance Battery Plus, though, and your £74,769 Taycan gets a bigger battery, and you'll have 375bhp in normal driving or 469bhp on overboost. As standard, the battery has a 71kWh usable capacity or, with a Performance Battery Plus, an 87kWh battery. That lifts its weight from 2050kg to 2130kg, hence the extra power - Porsche wouldn't want a 'Performance Battery' car to be slower. Anyway it also gives a longer range, which is 268 miles with the smaller battery and 301 miles with the bigger one, on the official WLTP drive cycle. Whether you'll get that in the real world is another matter. Stay tuned to see whether this lighter, rear-drive EV is just as compelling as other Taycans, too.
  12. From sharing her 10-day smoothie detox to turning vegan, Lizzo has been taking a lot of initiatives to keep herself healthy. And despite criticism, she has reiterated how she is comfortable in her skin. But self-love does not always happen organically. The Grammy winner recently shared a video on Instagram in which she is seen reciting self-affirmations in the mirror, adding how talking to her belly helped her practice self-love. “I started talking to my belly this year. Blowing her kisses and showering her with praises,” the 32-year-old singer captioned the video. Lizzo opened up on how she gradually learned to love every part of herself. “I used to want to cut my stomach off I hated it so much. But it’s literally ME. I am learning to radically love every part of myself. Even if it means talking to myself every morning. This is your sign to love on yourself today!” “Thank you so much for keeping me happy, for keeping me alive. Thank you. I’m gonna continue to listen to you. You deserve all the space in the world to breathe, to expand and contract, to give me life,” she is heard saying in the video. Earlier, in December, she had talked about how she was “hating” her body, in a TikTok video. “I came home and I took my clothes off to take a shower and I just started having all of these really negative thoughts about myself,” she said at the time. “Like, you know, ‘What’s wrong with me? Maybe everything, [and] all the mean things people say about me are true.’ And, you know, ‘Why am I so disgusting?’ And [I was] hating my body,” she was quoted as saying by People. “Normally, I would have some positive thing to say to get me out of this, but I don’t, and that’s ok too. I think these are normal [thoughts and feelings] and they happen to everybody, they happen to the best of us,” she had said.
  13. Rabat – The Ministry of Health said the number of people in Morocco who have received COVID-19 vaccines reached 351,723 as of February 4. Morocco launched the vaccination campaign on January 28. The first phase targets people on the forefront, including teachers, doctors, and security services, as well people at particular risk of infection. In its daily COVID-19 update, the ministry also announced that it confirmed 620 new COVID-19 cases in the last 24 hours. The figure brings the total number of infections Morocco has recorded to 473,667. The ministry also recorded 28 deaths. The number of people in Morocco who have died from the virus reached 8,351. Health officials reported that 742 more carriers recovered from COVID-19 in Morocco. The number of recoveries stands at 452,522. The number of active cases reached 12,794, including 622 in critical condition. The region of Casablanca-Settat recorded 255 new cases and eight deaths, while Tanger-Tetouan-Al Hoceima confirmed 80 new infections and three new fatalities. The Rabat-Sale-Kenitra region followed with 76 new cases and five deaths, while the Oriental region recorded 74 new infections and one COVID-19-related death. Morocco’s region of Marrakech-Safi reported 38 new COVID-19 cases and three deaths, followed by Souss-Massa (33 cases, one death), Fez-Meknes (17 cases, two deaths), Draa-Tafilalet (12 cases, two deaths), Beni Mellal Khenifra (12 cases, three deaths), and Laayoune-Sakia El Hamra (11 cases, zero new deaths). The ministry also confirmed eight cases in Dakhla-Oued Eddahab, while Guelmim-Oued Noun reported four. Neither region recorded any new fatalities in the last 24 hours.
  14. Name of the game: Citadel: Forged with Fire Price: 15.99$ After Discount Link Store: Here Offer ends up after X hours: 9 February Requirements: MINIMUM: Système d'exploitation : Windows 7 or better Processeur : 2.0GHZ or better Mémoire vive : 8 GB de mémoire Graphiques : GTX 950 equivalent or better DirectX : Version 10 Réseau : Connexion internet haut débit Espace disque : 20 GB d'espace disque disponible RECOMMENDED Système d'exploitation : Windows 7 or better Processeur : 3.0GHZ or better Mémoire vive : 16 GB de mémoire Graphiques : GTX 970 or better DirectX : Version 10 Réseau : Connexion internet haut débit Espace disque : 20 GB d'espace disque disponible
  15. Whenever a new case comes out with a price point that’s below $100, I get a little excited. When its $25 below that, it gets me pretty excited. So just imagine my joy when Phanteks sent me the P360A, which carries an MSRP of just $70 but is available for a few dollars less if you shop around. Add to that an absolutely brilliant, vibrant, and lavish RGB implementation with two fans, an LED strip and a genuinely effective controller. My day has been made, and if you’re in the market for a case for a budget-oriented system but still want it to look good, this case is for you. Of course, clear shortcuts have been taken to bring this kind of feature set to the table at this price. The sheet metal is quite thin, the paint job on the interior doesn’t ooze quality like more expensive cases, and the case doesn’t even include basic essentials such as a power LED, HDD LED, or a reset switch. There’s no USB Type-C to be found here, either. However, none of those things really matter at this price – when finished, a system in the P360A genuinely looks good, cools well, and it’s easy to assemble. In case you haven’t guessed yet, the Phanteks P360A is easily deserving of a spot on our Best PC Cases list as Best Budget ATX case. Let’s find out why, shall we? Touring around the exterior of the Phanteks P360A, it is immediately clear that this is a budget case. The sheet metal and glass panel are thin and the latter doesn’t quite line up with at the back of the case. And the PSU shroud is external, allowing for a smaller glass panel. Regardless, these shortcuts don’t take much away from the final look of the product, as the paint job on the outside is nice. The mesh intake is also well-manufactured, and as you’ll see later, there is a very nice RGB strip along the bottom of the side panel. Phanteks doesn’t bother with a power LED, HDD LED or reset switches – all of that costs money and is rarely important anyway, so why bother when the funds can go to RGB instead? Front IO is covered by two USB 3.0 ports and separate headphone and mic jacks. The power button is at the center, and the two buttons you see below the USB ports are the RGB mode and RGB color selectors. Inside the P360A there is space for up to an ATX motherboard and long graphics cards up to 400mm (15.75 inches), so you’ll be able to fit very powerful gaming systems in here. Storage options aren’t lavish, but then again that isn’t the focus of this chassis. There’s room for two 3.5-inch drives that slide in from the front, and two 2.5-inch drives behind the motherboard tray. You can buy an optional third tray to add a third 2.5-inch drive. You’ll notice that on the interior, the paint job isn’t quite as nice as the outside, but it’s nothing to be concerned about. The connectivity for the RGB is also found inside. The fans and LED strip all connect through Phanteks’ own 3-pin headers, but a ‘standard’ header is present to connect additional RGB devices not from Phanteks, and you can opt to connect the RGB to your motherboard and override the built-in controller. But in all fairness, what’s here is quite a good controller – there’s no need to shop for a board that has an A-RGB header, which can help you save some money. Another spot where Phanteks cut costs is in the filtration – or rather, lack thereof. Of course, the marketing lingo is all about how the front panel filters without the need of a filter, but we both know that’s to cut the cost of a real air filter. The front has a 1mm perforation, which should take care of the worst offenders, but stuff will still get through more than a dedicated filter. Of course, the lack of removable filtration will be good for cooling. That being said, you have to evaluate these things on a per-use-case basis. If you’re like me, and you run your PC for 12+ hours a day, you obviously want to pass on the P360A because you’ll be cleaning out the interior far too often. But if you only play games on it for a couple hours a day or so, the amount of dust that accumulates in the system will be far lower, so won’t be as much of an issue. Fortunately, there is a filter at the top above the radiator exhaust to protect from falling dust and debris, which will protect the system from passive pollution. The power supply also has its own filter to spare cleanup jobs there. However, cooling is another area where the P360A differs from the P300A. It comes with two RGB fans instead of one non-RGB spinner, and the top radiator mount supports up to 240mm radiators instead of only a 120mm unit – something many buyers may appreciate. Theoretically, the case should also be able to fit a 280mm cooler at the top, but you’ll undoubtedly run into the VRM coolers or tall memory with the vast majority of motherboards, so I’d recommend you stick with a 240mm AIO at the largest. If you’re dead-set on a 280mm radiator though, you can mount it at the front, but I don’t see why you would want to get rid of the pretty fans that are included.
  16. Security researchers at Google have called 2020 the year of zero-day exploits owing to the large number of these vulnerabilities that were detected and fixed last year. In a year-in-review post, the researchers shared that while they are still a long way off from detecting the zero-day exploits in the wild, surprisingly a quarter of them stem from previously disclosed vulnerabilities and could have easily been prevented. “1 out of every 4 detected 0-day exploits could potentially have been avoided if a more thorough investigation and patching effort were explored,” wrote Maddie Stone, a security researcher in Google’s Project Zero team. We've put together a list of the best endpoint protection software Here’s our list of the best disaster recovery services Take a look at these best malware removal software Fool me twice According to Stone, last year Project Zero unearthed 24 zero-day exploits that were being actively used in the wild. In her post, she breaks down six of them to reveal how they were related to previously disclosed vulnerabilities. "Some of these 0-day exploits only had to change a line or two of code to have a new working 0-day exploit," she writes. As she breaks down the six vulnerabilities the team discovered in Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari, and Windows, Stone notes that they were the result of improper fixes. Surprisingly, her analysis also revealed that three of the vulnerabilities that were patched in 2020 were again “either not fixed correctly or not fixed comprehensively.” Stone asks vendors to make all the investment required to release correct and comprehensive patches for vulnerabilities that cover all its variants: “Many times we’re seeing vendors block only the path that is shown in the proof-of-concept or exploit sample, rather than fixing the vulnerability as a whole, which would block all of the paths.” Stone also puts some onus on the security researchers as well who should do a better job of following up and testing the patch. “We would really like to work more closely with vendors on patches and mitigations prior to the patch being released,” she suggests, adding that “early collaboration and offering feedback during the patch design and implementation process is good for everyone. Researchers and vendors alike can save time, resources, and energy by working together, rather than patch diffing a binary after release and realizing the vulnerability was not completely fixed.”
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